The nation's strongest quake since 1980, Italy's latest earthquake may have a long-term impact on fault lines.

Monks walk in front of the Cathedral of St. Benedict in Norcia, central Italy after a powerful earthquake hit destroying a Benedictine cathedral, a medieval tower and other landmarks that had survived the earlier jolts across a mountainous region of small historic towns.

A 6.6-magnitude earthquake rocked central Italy on Sunday morning, and is believed to be the strongest quake to hit the nation in decades.

The earthquake at about 7:40 a.m. local time was centered near Norcia, Italy, a town in the Perugia region about 150 kilometers northeast of Rome. Aftershocks were reported as far away as Venice. The quake brought down several buildings but no deaths were reported; many had evacuated (25,000 are now reportedly displaced) after the area experienced a foreshock of a lower magnitude.

Italy Prime Minister Matteo Renzi called the quake "the strongest since the Irpinia one," a 6.9-magnitude earthquake in southern Italy in November 1980 that killed some 3,000 people.
An earthquake of a comparable magnitude (6.2) hit the region in August, killing more than 300 people.
Though the damage caused by the most recent quake is less significant than that of the August quake, the tremors could still mean disaster for the region.

The cause of the earthquakes is well known. The faults that run through Italy are moving apart at a speed of three millimeters per year. This causes insecurities in the fault, as evidenced by the recent earthquake. (Read our earthquake explainer.)

he August quake damaged two nearby faults, Laga and Vettore. The latest earthquakes have further broken portions of the Vetorre fault, but it remains to be seen how deep the damage goes.

If the latest tremors damaged deeper portions of the fault, the extent of the damage may not be evident on the surface.

"This would be what we call 'depth segmentation' where the shallow portions break followed by the deeper portions. And it means you can have an earthquake repeating more frequently on the same faults," Dr. Richard Walters, an earth sciences lecturer at Durham University in the U.K., told the BBC.